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U.S. Senator Reaffirms 'Hold' On Armenia Envoy Pick

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  • U.S. Senator Reaffirms 'Hold' On Armenia Envoy Pick

    U.S. SENATOR REAFFIRMS 'HOLD' ON ARMENIA ENVOY PICK
    By Emil Danielyan

    Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
    April 25 2007

    A U.S. senator has pledged to continue to block the congressional
    confirmation of President George W. Bush's nominee to be the next
    U.S. ambassador to Armenia over his failure to describe as genocide
    the mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey.

    Bush, meanwhile, again refused to use the term "genocide" with regard
    to what he called "one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th century"
    in an annual message to the Armenian community in the United States.

    Bush has twice nominated career diplomat Richard Hoagland to
    replace John Evans, the previous U.S. ambassador in Yerevan. Evans
    is believed to have been recalled by the White House last year
    for publicly referring the 1915 slaughter of some 1.5 million
    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as the first genocide of the 20th
    century. The statements made two years ago contradicted successive
    U.S. administrations' policy on the highly sensitive issue which takes
    into account Turkey's long-standing strong denial of the genocide.

    Senator Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, blocked Hoagland's
    mandatory endorsement by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee last
    September and reaffirmed the so-called "hold" in January. Menendez
    remained adamant in opposing the ambassadorial appointment on
    Tuesday as he spoke at a ceremony on Capitol Hill that marked the
    92nd anniversary of the genocide.

    "I wish the Ambassador [Evans] was back in Armenia, but if we
    cannot get him there, I refuse to release my hold on Ambassador
    Hoagland because of his testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations
    Committee," he said, according to the Armenian National Committee of
    America (ANCA).

    Evans also attended the event along with about two dozen lawmakers.

    "If we dare not call the 1915 events genocide, we make it more likely
    that current genocides, such as that in Darfur, will continue and
    future genocides will occur," he was reported to say.

    The ANCA is strongly opposed to Hoagland's appointment, having
    branded him a "genocide denier." But the more moderate Armenian
    Assembly of America has effectively urged the Senate to confirm Bush's
    nominee. Assembly leaders say that Hoagland never explicitly denied
    the genocide and that the prolonged absence of a U.S. ambassador in
    Yerevan is damaging Armenia's interests.

    Both lobbying groups criticized Bush on Tuesday for his continuing
    refusal to characterize the Armenian massacres as genocide. In a
    statement, Aram Hamparian, the ANCA executive director, said the
    president "missed yet another opportunity to speak with moral clarity
    about the Armenian Genocide and to bring America back to the right
    side of this key human rights issue."

    "I join my fellow Americans and Armenian people around the world in
    commemorating this tragedy and honoring the memory of the innocent
    lives that were taken," Bush said in his April 24 statement. "The
    world must never forget this painful chapter of its history."

    Bush said a "sincere and open examination of the historic events of
    the late-Ottoman period" should be an "essential part" of efforts to
    improve Turkish-Armenian relations. He went on to praise Washington's
    "strong and vibrant ties" with Armenia. "Our Nation is grateful for
    Armenia's contributions to the war on terror, particularly for its
    efforts to help build a peaceful and democratic Iraq," he said.

    The ANCA the Assembly have been lobbying Congress to pass a
    resolution affirming the genocide and urging the U.S. president to
    do the same. The draft resolution was introduced to the House of
    Representatives in January and has since been co-sponsored by more
    than 190 members of the chamber. Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other top
    House Democrats have supported such bills in the past.
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